Blind Valley student receives $25,000 scholarship

A Valley high school student is one of 10 students across the country to receive $25,000 in scholarship money.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — A Valley high school student is one of 10 students across the country to receive a total of $25,000 in scholarship money from AXA Advisors Southwest on Tuesday.

Max Ashton is a senior at Brophy College Preparatory in Phoenix and was selected because of some of the incredible challenges he has overcome in his life.

“When I was three months old, I was diagnosed with a condition called Leber’s,” said Ashton. “Basically, that mean(s) I am almost completely blind.”

Leber’s — or Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy — has not slowed Ashton down but rather inspired him to do many things that people without disabilities rarely attempt.

When he was 13 years old, Ashton became the youngest blind person to climb Mount Kilimanjaro. He’s also hiked the Grand Canyon from rim to rim and even completed a swim to Alcatraz.

Overcoming his disability to complete these challenges is part of the reason he was selected as one of 52 students nationwide to receive a scholarship of $10,000. From those 52 students, he was selected as one of 10 to be awarded an additional $15,000.

Ashton said that money will have a big impact on his future.

“It’s great because it’s going to help me go to the college that I want to, instead of just the one that I can afford,” said Ashton.

Beginning in the fall, Ashton will take on his next big challenge of leaving home and continuing his education at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles.

His father, Marc, said it’ll be difficult to see his son go but continuing to challenge himself has been a part of Max’s personality since he was very young.

“I think he was challenged to prove to people that didn’t believe. He really said, ‘I could do that,'” his father said. “Even in his essay for AXA, he said, ‘People didn’t believe in me for many, many years and said I couldn’t do things and I proved them wrong.'”